Answer #1:
Yiddish is a language derived form medieval German combined with Hebrew
and Aramaic and first spoken by the Wist Jews. It is written using the Hebrew
alephbet.
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Answer #2:
Yiddish is the "Patois" of languages of every eastern European country
with any significant Jewish population during the past 900 years. It's experiencing a resurgence
today.
Yes, Yiddish is one of dozens of Jewish languages, and the most widely spoken Jewish language in Europe, up until the 20th Century.
Yiddish is a dialect of low German, combined with 11 other languages, and it is written with a variation of the Hebrew alphabet, though it is not related to Hebrew.
Here are some other Jewish languages:
The Yiddish word for Yiddish is "Yidish" (יידיש).
"Redstu Yiddish" is Yiddish for "Do you speak Yiddish?"
"Jewish" in Yiddish is "ייִדיש" (yidish), pronounced as "yiddish."
There is no equivalent Yiddish name for Robert. But you can spell Robert in Yiddish as ראָבערט
Yiddish is spelled as Y-I-D-D-I-S-H.
The Yiddish word for nosy is "shnorer."
The Yiddish word for disappointed is "Ahntoisht".
'Brother' in Yiddish is 'bruder'.
In Yiddish, husband is "man."
It is the Yiddish word for a woman who is not Jewish. It is slang in English, but it is not slang in Yiddish.
In Yiddish = סיערעIn Hebrew = סיארה
The yiddish word for dumpling is 'kneydl' :)